J
Joe R
I’m the luckiest guy in the world! I share this story with you in hope of preventing injury or death, or just a real bad day.I am the proud owner of a 98 H240. Last year while sailing in about 20 –22 mph wind I heard a loud c-r-a-c-k followed by nothing. The next day while out in a 15-18mph wind I heard a pop, then saw one of the port side stays go flying off into space. Fortunately it went forward as it arced across the sky instead of back at me (without taking my head with it).It turned out that the previous year we had inadvertently bent some of the side stays while stepping and/or dropping the mast. This year the force on the stay was through a bent eyebolt that secured the stay into the “U” bolt on the boat. After most of a season of stress on the eyebolt, instead of re-straightening the bolt, it fatigued it and it eventually failed & broke while under stress.The mast struts and remaining side stays kept the mast upright and of course I dropped sails to reduce the stress on the equipment and motored back to the slip where I replaced the broken fastener and another which was also bent, but still holding.On Thursday, we put the boat away for winter. We gently lowered the mast without incident and had two people monitoring the side stays to prevent kinking and bending. After unattaching the mast at the base I turned around and saw the upper end of the self furling jib including the top part of the fore stay and its fastener in-the-water.Apparently it had also been weakened previously, but waited until we lowered the mast before failing. It must have been hanging by the proverbial thread. I’m so glad I didn’t go for one last sail before dropping the mast. Many thanks to my guardian angels.Moral of the story? Check the fasteners for bends especially if you think you have kinked something while raising or lowering the mast. (Oh some of these T-bars and end fasteners are supposed to be pre-bent by the manufacturer – see the ones in the spreaders.)Dogged-A-Bullet